Montreal's Bloody Mafia War Won't End
Crime & Drugs
June 2, 2016
Until police found Rocco Sollecito's corpse in his bullet-riddled luxury SUV a few hundred meters from police headquarters in Laval, just north of Montreal, he was likely the highest-ranking mafioso still standing in Canada. But the grisly discovery on May 28 was just the latest in a string of gangland slayings in the city, where the Italian mafia has struggled to fill a power vacuum caused by years of internal struggle and police busts.
A once-unified network of Italian mobsters, street gangs, bikers, and corrupt city officials has decayed and crumbled in the last decade. Violence has flared as a result, and the stack of bodies is growing higher.
It's a historic low point for the Montreal mafia, long considered by authorities to be the strongest organized crime group in Canada.
It's unclear exactly which organization is behind the current spate of violence, but, as one mafia expert told VICE News: "That group, whoever it is, appears to be much stronger."

Police search Rocco Sollecito's SUV in Laval, where his body was found.
Leadership Woes
On the wiretap recording, Francesco del Balso's voice is calm.
"I want my ****ing money today or Lorenzo said he's gonna grab you, he's gonna ****ing turn you into a pretzel. And don't **** with him, bro.
"Listen to me, go get 112 dimes and save yourself a beating of your life."
This is how the Montreal mafia's version of a collections agency works.
At the time of the recording, Del Balso was a notorious bookmaker and high-ranking member of Montreal's infamous Rizzuto crime family. The Lorenzo on the tape was presumably Lorenzo Giordano, a close associate of Del Balso and the capo considered to be the de facto leader of the family for a time.
The Rizzuto family is an organization so powerful during the rule of former leader Vito Rizzuto that it often drew comparisons to the fabled "Five Families" that controlled New York during the city's mafia heyday. The FBI still considers the Rizzuto syndicate to be a wing of the New York-based Bonanno crime family.
The Rizzutos have been the only game in town for years. But now, experts say, the family is weak and awaiting a strongman to either take it over or replace it by force. The dons of the family have had a hard time staying alive.
One of the biggest blows to the organization was Operation Colisée, a 2006 law enforcement operation that spanned three years and resulted in the arrests of Del Balso, Giordano, Sollecito, and a host of other Rizzuto allies. Convictions for drug trafficking, extortion, and bookmaking put them behind bars.
The mobsters were eventually released from prison, and, one by one, they each wound up dead. Sollecito is just the most recent. The killings started not long after Rizzuto's confession in 2007 that he was involved in the murder of three rival mobsters. Vito died of natural causes in 2013, making him one of the few in the family to die peacefully.

Vito Rizzuto, pictured bottom left, at a stag party. Juan Ramon Fernandez, bottom right, was killed in Sicily in 2013 in an ambush. Photo via The Sixth Family: The Collapse of the New York Mafia and the Rise of Vito Rizzuto by Adrian Humphreys.
n December 2009, gunmen killed Vito's son Nicolo Rizzuto, Jr. in broad daylight on a sidewalk in Montreal's west end. The following year, a sniper perched in a tree shot and kill his grandfather, Nick Sr., while he sat at his kitchen table.
Next was Paolo Renda, brother-in-law to Vito and once believed to be his most trusted consigliere. He mysteriously disappeared in 2010, while the organization was trying to figure out new leadership. His wife found his car with the windows rolled down and the keys in the ignition, but no sign of her husband.
Police figure that the one trying to broker the new leadership for the family was Salvatore "The Iron Worker" Montagna, a one-time leader of the New York-based Bonanno family, who was deported back to Montreal in 2009.
In 2011, he was gunned down in a residential neighborhood on Montreal's north shore — but his would-be assassins were sloppy. He survived and jumped into the freezing Assomption River, washing up a few minutes later on a small island, where police found him bleeding to death in the snow.
Seven men ultimately pled guilty to conspiring to kill Montagna. One of them, Raynald Desjardins, was a right-hand man to Rizzuto and the target for more than one murder plot.
In March 2016, months after Giordano's release from prison to a halfway house, police in Laval responded to a report of gunshots outside a gym near the highway. They found him sitting in his car, sporting multiple fresh bullet holes.
The murders have even spread internationally. Two Canadian mobsters were whacked in a 2013 ambush in Sicily, apparently on orders from Montreal.
Virtually the only high-ranking figures in the organization who aren't dead are in jail.
Police figure, most recently, leadership of the family was split between Sollecito's son, Stefano, and Montreal lawyer Leonardo Rizzuto, Vito's second son. Canadian authorities arrested both men late last year.
Edited by
SassyEuro2
on Fri 06/03/16 07:26 AM